Site navigation
-
Spiders
- Spider diversity
- A Spider toolkit
- Australia's spider fauna
- Bird-dropping spiders
- Black House and Grey House Spiders
- Carrai Cave Spider
- Comb-footed Platform Spider
- Cupboard Spider
- Daddy-long-legs Spider
- Flower Spiders
- Foliage Webbing Spider
- Fringed Jumping Spider
- Sydney Funnel-web Spider
- Ground spiders
- Huntsman Spiders
- Jumping spiders
- Lynx Spider
- Magnificent Spider
- Mouse Spider
- Net-casting Spiders
- Rufous Net-casting Spider
- Garden Orb Weaving Spiders
- Golden Orb Weaving Spiders
- Silver Orb Weaving Spiders
- Redback Spider
- Sac Spiders
- St Andrew's Cross Spider
- Slater-eating Spider
- Spotted Ground Spiders
- Tasmanian Cave Spider
- Trapdoor Spiders
- Sydney Brown Trapdoor Spider
- Tube spiders
- Two-spined Spider
- Whip Spider
- White-tailed Spider
- Wolf Spiders
- Garden Wolf Spider
- Spider facts
- Dangerous spiders
- Spiders in the Australian Museum Collections
- A spider's life
- Spiders in art and culture
- About the Museum
- What's on
- Visiting the Australian Museum
news
Lynda Kelly
19 March 2010
How does using Twitter with students boost their learning and engagement? Mashable explains how...
Frank Howarth
Robin Torrence
19 February 2010
In its role as a leading scientific institution, the Australian Museum recognizes that climate change poses a serious environmental, economic and social threat to our current way of life and to the security of future generations across the globe.
what's new
- Fanfin Angler, Caulophryne jordani
- Twitter in the classroom boosts student engagement
- Visitors to the Australian Museum use social media
- This week in Fish: Lost Barramundi and a new Research Associate
- Greg Pratt
- Karen Wong
- Common Lionfish, Pterois volitans (Linnaeus, 1758)
- Common Lionfish in the Gold Coast Seaway
- Earth Hour 2010
- Rainbow Lorikeet
what's popular
- Australian Museum Ornithology Collection
- Warty Prowfish, Aetapcus maculatus (Günther, 1861)
- Australian Museum Palaeontology Collection
- Palorchestes: A tale of misidentification
- Australian Museum Mammalogy Collection
- Mammals: Mammalia
- Moths, butterflies and skippers: Order Lepidoptera
- Spotted Wobbegong, Orectolobus maculatus (Bonnaterre, 1788)
- Chitons - Class Polyplacophora
- Intertidal habitats
recent comments
Australian Museum Herpetology Collection
Dear Chris,
Yes it looks like a juvenile Diporiphora australis. The only species similar in coloration...
crustacea.net
Yes Dr Lowry is planning to publish online the new microcrustacia classifications that he has been working,...
Redback Spiders
I've been bitten 6 times by redbacks, 3 times in one day. The first time i was in my backyard and i got...




A cobweb spider, Theridion sp.
A common house spider, Achaearanea sp.
A Jumping Spider's (Mopsus mormon) eyes
A Mullamullang Cave Spider
A signal line spider, Metepeira sp.
A Triangular Spider, Arkys sp
An orb weaver spider
An undescribed marine spider
Black House Spider on bark
Black House Spider, Badumna sp.
Blue Mountains Funnel-web Spider, female
Brown Recluse Spider
Carrai Cave Spider, Progradungula carraiensis
Cave spider, Stiphidion sp.
Colourful Lynx Spider, Oxyopes
Comb-footed Platform Spider Achaearanea mundula
Crinoline Spider, Stiphidion facetum
Eye shine from a Wolf Spider
Female Mouse Spider, Missulena sp
Female Wolf spider with young and egg sac